asked 200k views
2 votes
Why not when you have s+(sx)=60 divide by x to get s+s=60/x thus giving 2s=60/x

and then s = 60/2x and thus 30 /x

asked
User Koxta
by
7.4k points

2 Answers

3 votes
well
s+sx=60
if you divided both sides by x (same as multiplying by 1/x) you would do
(1/x)(s+sx)=(1/x)60
s/x+sx/x=60/x
s/x=s=60
the division carries over to both terms

undistribute s
s(1+x)=60
divide both sides by 1+x
s=
(60)/(1+x)
answered
User Mark Molina
by
8.4k points
7 votes
You can't do that, because what you do to one side you have to do to the other, and so, you have to divide the entire left side term by x, so you'd get:

s/x + s = 60/x not s+s=60/x
answered
User Mdakin
by
8.8k points

No related questions found

Welcome to Qamnty — a place to ask, share, and grow together. Join our community and get real answers from real people.